1. rightness (n) a: accordance with conscience or morality b: appropriate conduct; doing the right thing c: conformity to fact or truth 2. truth (n) a: the state of being the case b: the body of real things, events, and facts

Thursday, March 16, 2006

PROTEST IN HALABJA

The only building to be constructed in Halabja in the last decade has been gutted by fire during today's protest by the people of Halabja against a leadership and a world that has forgotten their continued suffering.

One killed as Iraqi Kurds riot in HalabjaBy AFPPublished March 16, 2006

A 14-year-old boy was killed when Iraqi security forces fired into a massive crowd of Kurds rioting in Halabja on Thursday on the anniversary of Saddam Hussein's gas attack on the Kurdish town.

About 7,000 demonstrators, including relatives of the 5,000 victims of the March 17, 1988 aerial poison gas attack on Halabja, set up roadblocks, attacked government offices and set fire to a memorial built to honor the dead.

Six protestors were also injured in the fracas.

The demonstrators, who were protesting against a lack of government services and corruption in the local administration, prevented officials from driving into town to mark the anniversary, waving banners saying "you have done nothing for the city" and "all government officials are corrupt".

Dissatisfaction over local government, which is widespread in Kurdish areas, is compounded in Halabja by the perception that government promises of compensation for the relatives of the victims of the gassing have not been honored.

In the aftermath of the attacks, the people of Halabja have shown lingering effects of the poison gases, including a higher frequency of congenital defects, respiratory problems and cancer.

Iraq's President Jalal Talabani, himself a Kurd, had earlier called on the country to unite against dictatorship in a statement commemorating the anniversary.

"The Halabja tragedy and the massacres that followed of Kurds and Iraqis remind us of the need to strengthen our unity in the face of efforts by supporters of the former regime and by terrorists to restore dictatorship," Talabani said in a statement.

The gassing of Halabja took place during the former Iraqi regime's Anfal campaign, a systematic attack on the Kurdish population in the north of the country between 1986 and 1989, which left some 180,000 dead and 4,500 villages destroyed.

In December 2005 a court in The Hague trying a Dutch trader on charges of selling chemicals to Saddam's regime in the 1980s, had to decide whether the Anfal campaign, and specifically Halabja, amounted to genocide.

The court concluded that according to the principles laid down in the 1948 Geneva Convention, the events amounted to genocide against the Kurdish people.

"The court has no other conclusion than that these attacks were committed with the intent to destroy the Kurdish population of Iraq," it said.

Saddam, who is currently on trial in Iraq for the massacre of Shias from the village of Dujail after an assassination attempt in 1982, is expected to next face charges of crimes against humanity over the Anfal campaign.

Halabja Protest Turns Violent

One person is killed as thousands voice their anger at authorities who they believe exploit their misery and do nothing to help them recover from Saddam’s gas attack.

By IWPR contributors in Halabja (ICR No. 168, 16-Mar-06)

The authorities in Iraqi Kurdistan faced a major challenge today, March 16, as residents of Halabja – scene of a chemical attack 18 years ago - took to the streets in anger at what they said was cynical exploitation of their plight by local politicians.

A 17-year-old boy was killed and dozens more injured in clashes with Kurdish security forces after around 2,000 locals – mostly young men – staged street protests to prevent officials getting into Halabja and taking part in ceremonies to mark the anniversary of the 1988 gas attack by Saddam Hussein’s military, in which 5,000 people died.

Officials from Halabja, in Sulaimaniyah province, had rolled out red carpets for the day of mourning. Earlier in the week, protest organisers had promised a peaceful sit-down action designed to embarrass the visiting dignitaries and block their access to the town.

But a build-up of security forces in the town suggested the authorities were determined to ensure everything went according to plan.

International delegates from Hiroshima and Italy visited the memorial on March 15, the day before the official anniversary.

On March 16, the ceremonies were called off after three hours of unrest during which demonstrators burnt tires, rolled rocks into the road or lay down there themselves to prevent officials driving into the town.

One group of stone-throwing demonstrators stormed the monument to the victims of the chemical attack, torching it and sending black smoke billowing over the town. Some said the memorial was no more than a “bank" which helped officials raise cash to line their own pockets.

Protesters also set fire to a museum honouring victims of the gas attack after smashing furniture and windows and ripping down photos there.

"Is this a place of martyrs or a bar?" asked Kameron Aziz, emptying out a refrigerator stocked with drinks including beer for the visiting officials. "Why shouldn't we set it on fire? This is a day of mourning, and our officials want to drink."

IWPR reporters witnessed Kurdish security forces opening fire on those who had stormed the memorial. Kurda Ahmed, 17, was hit in the abdomen by a police rifle bullet, said eyewitnesses, who also alleged that a member of the security forces shot him again in the side, firing a pistol at close range.

Ahmed died in Halabja hospital. A doctor who treated him but asked not to be named confirmed that he was hit by two different bullets.

Ten others were treated for injuries, the doctor reported, including four who were still in critical condition with gunshot wounds. Demonstration organisers said at least 100 people were beaten by security forces.

"This is a repeat of the Halabja tragedy," said Mariwan Halabjaee, one of the organisers. "What police and security have done is the same as the Baathists."

A security official who asked to remain anonymous said police responded with gunfire after demonstrators fired at them first. He said several protesters were detained briefly but all had been released.

The northern Kurdish territories have largely been immune from the violence plaguing the rest of Iraq. Police in Baghdad found 25 bodies of men shot execution-style on march 15 and 16, while to the north of the capital, United States and Iraqi forces launched major air assaults on Samarra.

Kurdistan may be the safest part of Iraq, but young people here have grown increasingly angry at the regional authorities who should be looking after them but whom they accuse of inaction, complacency and corruption.

As the placards carried by protesters made plain, there is a strong sense in Halabja that officials quietly ignore the real needs of survivors at the same time as playing up the town’s terrible history, which is emblematic of Saddam’s oppression of the Kurds and thus serves justification for a strongly decentralised Kurdish entity.

Year after year, politicians from the two leading Kurdish parties, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, PUK, and the Kurdistan Democratic Party, come to pay tribute to the victims and pledge help to regenerate the town. But local people say nothing gets done – infrastructure is in a state of collapse, the roads are unpaved, houses still bear the damage they suffered in Saddam’s war with Iran, and healthcare provision is poor even though the attack left thousands of survivors with a legacy of respiratory disease, cancer and other problems.

"I want compensation," said Ali Hassan Saleh, who lost two children in the chemical attack and accuses the PUK of failing to provide the house it promised him. "The government hasn't paid attention to this town. We need proper services."

The authorities in Sulaimaniyah, the seat of one of Kurdistan’s two administrations, appeared unrepentant, with the PUK branding the protestors as "terrorists" and deputy prime minister Emad Ahmed saying, "This is an act of sabotage, and we are investigating."

Mahdi Mahmood, who represents the Islamic Union of Kurdistan in Halabja, said all the main political parties had agreed to investigate the violence and also to form a committee to address residents' demands.

It may take more than that to rebuild public confidence.

"We were just asking for our rights," said Habi Taoufiq Abdullah, who was treated in hospital after being shot in the hip. "We didn't deserve this response."

The people did not destroy their primitive medical facilities. They did not desecrate their cemetery. They attacked the symbol of the official neglect of their plight. Will the leadership understand the message? More importantly, will the leadership act on it for the alleviation of suffering? Or will they continue to ignore the extreme hardship of the people, in order to build more "Dream Cities" for the elites?

Last month, Mariwan Halabjaee, a Kurdish writer from Halabja, published a book in Sulaimaniyah about women and sex in Islam. Many, including Sulaimaniyah's minister of religious affairs, considered it blasphemous and have called for his trial. Halabjaee's phone has been shut off since the protest, and he could not be reached for comment.

Muhamad Gaznaiy, the minister of endowments and religious affairs in Kurdistan region's Sulaimaniyah administration, addressed the demonstrators when they marched to the council of ministers. He said he agreed that Halabjaee and the Danish newspaper should be condemned but did not support street protests over the issue. He announced that he has sued Halabjaee for blasphemy.

Hi !Please make note to use the kurdishform of names and geographycal places,thus the name of the poisenedtown is HELEBCE in kurdish and it must be used as such,and SILÊMANÎ is the correct way ofrefering to the Kurdish town famous for its humour !!

Hi Vladimir. Okay, so an opinion piece at KM. I still stand by my opinion on this subject.

Let me guess, Muhamad Gasnaiy is PUK? Well, of course street protests are bad. They don't fit the image that the new airports, shopping malls and fancy villas are designed to show. What we're looking at here is not the building of a new Kurdistan, but the building of another Gulf state, complete with oil and everything. When are they going to start hiring the Southeast Asians to do all the work?

Anonymous, I am aware of your point. My point is that non-Kurds read this blog too, and in order for them to understand the places that I'm talking about, I sometimes have to use English spellings. In the last couple of days, I have discovered that there are people outside of Kurdistan who did not even know there was a problem in Helebce/Halabja. Now they do. Now they might pay attention the next time the media presents news about "Halabja."

By the way, in South Kurdistan they don't use Latin script, so the signs all say "Halabja," transliterated from Arabic script.